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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Description  





3 Bibliography  





4 References  














Tábara Beatus






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Miniature of the scriptorium tower (verso, folio 171), showing two of the named copyists and illuminators with an assistant.

The Tábara BeatusorBeatus of Tábara is a 10th-century illuminated manuscript, containing the Commentary on the ApocalypsebyBeatus of Liébana. It originated in the San Salvador de Tábara Monastery and is now held in Spain's National Historical Archive in Madrid under the catalogue number L.1097B. Only eight of its original hundred miniatures survive.

History

[edit]

Acolophon on folio 167 of the manuscript states it was completed by a scribe called Emeterius on 29 July 970 in the scriptorium of the San Salvador Monastery in Tábara. Its copyist was a monk called Monnius and its illumination was by one Magius, who could be the same man as Maius, who illuminated the Morgan Beatus but died halfway through producing the Tábara Beatus. It was copied from an unknown 10th century manuscript from the province of Leon.[1]

When it was restored a hypothesis arose that the present manuscript is the result of binding one two-folio work with two folios from another Beatus manuscript, with that other manuscript forming folios 167 and 168 of the work as it stands today, which have been cut, possibly to make larger folios fit into the new codex. This hypothesis is not universally accepted and John Williams argues that all the work's folios belong to the same manuscript.[2]

One of the manuscript's later owners was Ramón Alvarez de la Braña, a librarian in Leon, from which it entered the collection of the School of Diplomacy in Madrid and then its present home.[1]

Description

[edit]

Its text is written in two columns in Visigothic minuscule. Glosses in Arabic are noted in the margins, showing that the monastery which produced and used it contained Mozarabic monks. It also contains large decorative capitals.[3] It belongs to the same group of Beatus manuscripts as the Gerona Beatus and Morgan Beatus and originated in the same scriptorium.[2]

Bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b (in Spanish) Vicente Garcia De Wolf and John Williams, Tabara Beatus, facsimile edition, Testimonio, Madrid, 2003, 336+172 p.
  • ^ a b (in Spanish) Catalogue entry
  • ^ (in French) Qantara Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tábara_Beatus&oldid=1231048726"

    Categories: 
    10th-century illuminated manuscripts
    Illuminated beatus manuscripts
    Mozarabic art and architecture
    Manuscripts in Latin
    Spanish literature
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with Spanish-language sources (es)
    Articles with French-language sources (fr)
    Webarchive template wayback links
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 26 June 2024, at 05:02 (UTC).

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